Quick Facts
- What: Trump orders Navy to “shoot and kill” any vessel laying mines in the Strait of Hormuz
- When: April 23, 2026 — posted on Truth Social
- Where: Strait of Hormuz — gateway for 20% of global oil
- Why now: IRGC confirmed laying mines for the second time since the war began on Feb 28
- Naval force: Three carrier strike groups now deployed to the Middle East — first time in 20+ years
- Impact: Tanker traffic through the strait has collapsed from 100+ ships/day to single digits
A Strait Choked Shut
In peacetime, more than 100 ships transit the Strait of Hormuz every day, carrying roughly a fifth of the world’s oil supply. Since Iran’s de facto closure began, that number has cratered to single digits on most days. The economic stranglehold is real and tightening. Trump framed the situation in characteristically blunt terms. The United States has “total control” over the strait, he wrote. “No ship can enter or leave without the approval of the United States Navy. It is ‘Sealed up Tight,’ until such time as Iran is able to make a DEAL!!!” The mines are the problem. Iran’s IRGC navy has been deploying them from small, fast Gashti-class patrol boats — vessels specifically designed for hit-and-run operations in confined waters. The mines are unsophisticated by modern standards, but in a narrow strait with heavy commercial traffic, even dated ordnance is devastating. Clearing them is a slow, dangerous business. Pentagon officials have estimated it could take six months to fully sweep the strait — and that’s assuming Iran stops laying new ones.Three Carriers, One Message
The arrival of the USS George H.W. Bush on April 23 completed a naval triad not assembled in the Middle East since the early days of the Iraq War. The Bush joins the USS Harry S. Truman and USS Carl Vinson — together fielding over 200 strike aircraft, dozens of escort warships, and a submarine screen that the Navy declines to discuss publicly. The concentration sends an unmistakable signal. Three carrier strike groups don’t deploy to the same theatre for mine clearance. They deploy for the possibility that mine clearance escalates into something bigger. The Navy is also running underwater drones through the strait as part of mine-clearing operations — a newer capability that keeps human divers out of the water and reduces risk, but can’t match the speed of Iran’s ability to reseed areas already swept.Escalation or Deterrence?
The shoot-to-kill order puts the Navy in an extraordinary position. Rules of engagement that authorize lethal force against small boats in crowded shipping lanes are a commander’s nightmare. Misidentification risks are real. The strait is full of fishing dhows, commercial skiffs, and civilian traffic that can look a lot like an IRGC Gashti from a helicopter camera at night. The order also arrives during fragile ceasefire talks. Negotiations to extend the Israel-Hezbollah truce are underway in Washington, and any kinetic exchange in the Hormuz could collapse the broader diplomatic framework overnight. But the White House calculus appears straightforward: mines in the strait are an act of war, and the United States will respond accordingly. Whether Iran tests the order remains the trillion-dollar question — literally, given the oil markets hanging on every headline from the Persian Gulf.Sources: CNBC, Washington Post, Stars and Stripes, Axios, Naval News




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